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Chapter 5
Deformation of the Crust
Section 5.3
Mountain Formation
EQ What are the four types of
mountains?
Mountain Ranges and Systems
mountain range a series of mountains that are
closely related in orientation, age, and mode of
formation
• A mountain is the most extreme type of
deformation.
• A group of mountain ranges that are adjacent is
called a mountain system.
• The largest mountain systems are part of two
larger systems called mountain belts.
Mountain Ranges and Systems,
continued
• Earth’s two major mountain belts are the circumPacific belt and the Eurasian-Melanesian belt.
• The circum-Pacific belt forms a ring around the
Pacific Ocean.
• The Eurasian-Melanesian belt runs from the
Pacific islands through Asia and southern
Europe and into northwestern Africa.
Questions
• What is a mountain range?
– a series of mountains that are closely related in
orientation, age, and mode of formation
• What are the earth’s two main mountain
belts?
– Earth’s two major mountain belts are the circumPacific belt and the Eurasian-Melanesian belt.
Collisions between Continental
and Oceanic Crust
• In this type of collision, the oceanic crust
subducts beneath the continental crust,
producing large-scale deformation which
uplifts high mountains.
Collisions Between Oceanic
Crust and Oceanic Crust
• In this collision, the denser oceanic plate
subducts beneath the other oceanic plate.
• Forms volcanic mountains.
Collisions Between Continents
• Example: formation of the Himalaya Mountains
in which the oceanic lithosphere of the Indian
plate subducted beneath the Eurasian plate.
• Because the plates are still colliding, the
Himalayas are still growing taller.
4 types of mountains
•
•
•
•
Folded mountains & plateaus
Fault-block mountains & grabens
Volcanic mountains
Dome mountains
Types of Mountains in the United States
Folded Mountains and Plateaus
folded mountain a mountain that forms when
rock layers are squeezed together and uplifted
• The highest mountain ranges in the world
consist of folded mountains that form when
continents collide.
• The same stresses that form folded mountains
also uplift plateaus, which are large, flat areas
of rock high above sea level.
Fault-Block Mountains and Grabens
fault-block mountain a mountain that forms
where faults break Earth’s crust into large blocks
and some blocks drop down relative to other
blocks.
• The same type of faulting that forms fault-block
mountains also forms long, narrow valleys called
grabens.
• Grabens and fault-block mountains commonly
occur together.
Questions
• What is a plateau?
– large, flat areas of rock high above sea level.
• What is a graben?
– Narrow valley
Volcanic Mountains
• When magma erupts onto Earth’s surface,
volcanic mountains form.
• Can form at convergent and divergent
boundaries.
• Other large volcanic mountains form on
the ocean floor at hot spots.
Dome Mountains
Dome mountain a dome-shaped structure
in which the layered rock slopes
downward gently from the central point of
folding.
• Dome mountains are rare, and form when
magma rises through the crust and pushes
up the rock layers above the magma.
Question
• What are the four types of mountains?
– Folded mountains & plateaus
– Fault-block mountains & grabens
– Volcanic mountains
– Dome mountains
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